Upon returning from his wartime service, Andrews operated an insurance agency. His father received numerous honors and held various government positions during and after the war, then operated an accounting firm and related businesses and taught briefly at the University of Virginia's business school when he finished leading the Internal Revenue Service (1953-1955), and also ran for president (unsuccessfully). During the Korean War, the younger Andrews would serve as an auditor general. He was also active in the
American Legion, Richmond
Chamber of Commerce, Commonwealth Club and for a time was the secretary of the Richmond City Democratic Committee. Richmond voters elected T. Coleman Andrews to the
Virginia House of Delegates in 1959, during the
massive resistance crisis following the U.S. Supreme Court decision in
Brown v. Board of Education and related Virginia Supreme Court and federal court decisions; he was re-elected in 1961, 1963 and 1965. However, Andrews was defeated for re-election in 1967 by
William Ferguson Reid, who became the first African-American member of the House of Delegates since 1891. Andrews helped organize the
American Independent Party and supported Alabama Governor
George C. Wallace in the 1968 U.S. presidential election. ==Death and legacy==